Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Aug 1963, p. 11

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| Killebrew's 33rd HR Puts Twins In Second By BOB GREEN * Associated Press Sports Writer Dick Stuart could do worse than listen to the words of wisdom from old Satch Paige. "Don't look back," the ageless wonder once warned. "Some- thing may be gaiming on you." It is. His name is Harmon Killebrew and he's fast closing on Stuart in the race for the American. League home run championship. Killebrew cracked a 3-3 tie with his 33rd homer in the sev- enth inming of Friday night's _game with Chicago White Sox. It propelled Minnesota Twins to a 5-3 victory over White Sox, vaulted Twins past Chicago into second place and pulled Kille- brew to within two of Stuart's league leading total of 35. Twins' Bob Allison followed in the last five. The 'back-to-back shots by Killebrew and Allison gave the Twns 19 in their last five games, tying a major league record set by New York Giants, in 1954. Minnesota also set two 'American League records with 24 homers in its last 10 games and 20 in its last six. ee The consecutive homers came off reliever Jim Brosnan, now 2-7, and provided Camilo Pas- cual with his 18th victory. He has lost six. Yankees jumped on starter Steve Barber for three runs-- two of them unearned--in the first inning, then coasted behind Downing's solid pitching. A sin. gle by Tony Kubek, an error, an infield out, Tom Tresh's dou- ble and a single by Joe Pepitone accounted for the Yankee first- inning runs. Killebrew's. shot immediately with his 30th homer as the powerhouse Twins tied one major league. record and. set two American League marks. DOWNING WINS In other games, the leading New York Yankees defeated Baltimore Orioles 4-1 behind the six-hit pitching of Al Downing, Cleveland Indians edged De- troit Tigers 5-4 and broke Ti- gers' eight-game winning string, Los Angeles Angels whipped Kansas City Athletics 6-2 and Don Zimmer's grand-slam_ho- mer led Washington Senators to a 7-0 rout of Boston Red Sox. Killebrew, who led the league in homers and runs batted in last season, continued to lead Twins' assault on the record, book. He's had four homers in his last three games and five FORT ERIE RESULTS APARICIO SINGLES Downing allowed Orioles' run in the eighth on a bloop single FIRST RACE -- 6 Furlongs for maiden) 3- and 4-year-olds. Purse $1900. 6Rare Reward, H'son .. 10.50 4.90 3.20 2-Good Ofd Jo, Simpson 5.00 2.90) 10-Artista, Fitzsimmons 2.40 Start good, won easily. | Also Ran in Order: Summons Pat, Wee M, Fairmagoria, Laskay Lad, Summer Lea, and Greg's Sister. Late Can.--Briefest. | Winner b f 3 Better Self -- Fiery Cross. Trainer, J. J. Mooney, Sr. Pool 20,393. Double pool 46,468. SECOND RACE -- 2-year-olds, ing all $7500. Rurse $2300. 3Apache Dancer, Potts .. 20.30 6.40 3.50 7-Sarges Not, Turcotte seees 3.20 2.40) 2-Linda's Love, Fitzsimmons . 2.70) Star? good, won driving. | Aso Ran in Order: Listen Lynn, Gypsy Bala, Snow Candy, and Northern Scot. DD NOS. 6 AND 3 PAID $94.90 Winner b f 2, Royal Vale -- Amaifi. Trainer, K. G. Nichols. .... . . Pool 35,892, ? THIRD RACE -- 6 Furs. for Maiden 3 and 4year-olds. Purse $1900. (8) 8-Ladyship, Hernandez 16.90 8.60 4.20 10-Humbroom, Walsh +» 7.30 3.50 4-Vibrazon, Gordon sastnvecesees: "QOD Start good, won driving Also Ran in Order: Sterling' Street, Belle Ange, Duchess Bingo, Mary Fred- erick and Brantomie. | Winner ch f 2 Valeruliah--Lace. Trainer T. P. Fleming Pool 41,256. FOURTH RACE -- 6 Furs. for 3-year- olds. Claiming all $3500. Purse $1900. (7) 5-D-Seven Deal, Turcotte . 6.60 3.80 3.00 4Tiny Fruit, Robinson ..... 6.30 4.60 7-Hannibal Miss, Wolski --. 4.40 Start good, won easily in Order: Top Trade, Cloch- ette, Gum Swamp and Espalaris. Winner b ¢ 3 Bull Page -- Carolator. Trainer A. H. Trudell Pool 48,758 claim- | b Go Lightly, Niagara Driftn Dalarco and aera Wace iu ca: we ver by Luis Aparicio, a wild pitch, -- 2 urs. for 3- '- FY FY $ olds and up. Claiming all $3500. Purse an infield out and a single by $1900. (7) ve ' Boog Powell. 4-Vineyard, Wals'! +++ 8.00 4.60 2.60) i 5Field Trial, Lanoway 670 390|_ Yankee pitchers mow have 2.20|allowed only six earned runs in 6Cathy Yates, Robinson tart good, won driving ithe last 78 innings, an earned Also Ran in Order: Yancy, Bonnie; Bird, Ponder On, and For a Time. run average of 0.77, and only Winner b g 6 Errard -- Clinging Vine./19 in the last 120 innings. \ Acogr cataa | Larry Brown's two-out homer ,|in the last of the ninth, only SIXTH RACE - 1 6 Furs. for *)his third of the season, snapped year-olds, Allowance. Purse $2500 (t) | m; ' r-Bonspiel, Dittfach 3.90 2.70 2.10| Tigers' long string. Rocky Cola- 1-Pic 'n Ple, Turcotte 3.20 2.10;vito drove in two Tiger runs Bart post won enitiy 210\with a double and a single. Also Ran in Order: Black Raven and) Zimmer's grarid slam, his Solitude Trail. ¢ 12th homer, was more than QUINELLA Nos. 4 and 1 PAID $10.0/4nough backing for the five-hit Winner, bg, 3, by Selector -- Miss|~.\ = : ' Papeests. tralcer R. T. Barnard, |pitching of Washington's Claude Pool $20,812. Quinella Poo! $26,930. | Osteen, now 8-10, Stuart had SEVENTH RACE | 62 Furs. for 3.|two of the Boston hits, a dou- year-olds and up. Claiming all $3500./ble and a triple, Titian bank Ken Hunt hit a three-run ho- 4Chinese Bandit, Turcotte 3.90 3.40 2.50 i r 2-Brierama, Wolski 8.40 3.70;mer for Los Angeles, putting it Sense worenly 2.60/ out of reach at Kansas City and fl sun| Snapping a four-game Angel los- Also Ran in Order: Sir Runnymede, x E i and Wind and Star Shadow. ling string. Rookie Mike Lee --_ air . . : Winner Oe oe OY a ae cnasonell picked up his first major league Pool $55,482. EIGHTH RACE -- 1 and 1-16 Miles) for 3-year-olds and up. Cdn. foaled.m| Ed Charles. Claiming all $2500. Purse $1900 (8) | 6-All's Pride, Hale 5.00 3.10 2.50 4-Warferd, Harrison 3.80 3.00) 8-West Four, Robinson 3.00 Start good won easily Also Ran in Order: Grand Vitesse, Mr. HORSE PLACES LONDON (CP) -- Tamerslip, owned by Ryland H. New of To- ronto, was an unlucky second Friday in the £2,000 ($6,000) So- lario, Stakes, one of Britain' he. Sauvagette. c Winner, br g, 9, by Alibhai -- Be Happy. Trainern J. A. Roberts. Leafs Suffer Blackout - Treatment By THE CANADIAN PRESS Just when things were start- ing to look bright, Toronto Ma- ple Leafs found themselves in the dark again. ' And today: they're raising a rumpus in the International League, protesting a situation which could cost them a playoff berth, A power failure Friday night at Syracuse resulted in a Tor- onto-Syracuse game being can- celled. Leafs, tied with Roches- ter Red Wings for the northern division's last playoff spot, had only six games remaining in the schedule, Leafs, who culminated a lengthy drive Thursday by de- feating Chiefs to finally catch Rochestser Red Wings have lodged an official protest. NOT SAME There had been power failure at Chiefs' park Thursday night which held the game up for al- most two hours. Toronto feels Friday's situation does not fall in the same category as adverse weather conditions which result in automatic cancellation under these circumstances, A ruling was expected today. Toronto wants the game re- scheduled for Tuesday night, the night after the official schedule ends, In games played Friday night, Rochester moved half a game ahead of Torortto into sole pos- session of second place, defeat- ing Richmond Virginians 13-4, Atlanta Crackers, reeling after five doubleheaders in six days, lost two to Indianapolis "indians, 5-3 and 4-1, and Buffalo Bisons eee Arkansas' Travelers By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer Don Drysdale, sticking an- other feather in his cap, may have stuck the final pin in San Francisco Giants' pennant hopes. amd rapped a key single that drove in the tie-breaking run as Los Angeles Dodgers stretched their National League lead to a commanding seven games by knicking off Giants 3-1 Friday night. The victory gave Dodgers the first two games of the four- game set with Giants and dropped the defending cham- pions into third place, .7% games behind. St. Louis..Cardi- nals, 11-6 winners over Phila- delphia Phillies, took over sec- ond place, seven lengths back. Drysdale, who last year won the Cy Young Award as the best pitcher in the majors with a 25-9 record but couldn't get the job done alone, has had a soméwhat less spectacular sea- son this year. However, his cre- dentials are impressive. The 27-year-old right hander. now has won 17 games against 15 losses while again proving the workhorse of the staff with 270 1-3 innings pitched--most in the majors. He ranks second in complete games with 16, is No. 2 in strikeouts with 228 and has a creditable 2.73 earned run av- erage. Most important, he probably has manager Walt Alston chuck- ling inwardly for the first time since Oct. 3, 1962, when Giants won the deciding game of the pennant play-off from' Dodgers. Drysdale scattered nine hits}; While Cards and Giants were! changing places, Milwaukee Braves stepped into fourth place over Phillies with a 3-1 victory against New York Mets, Cincinnati Reds edged Pitts- burgh Pirates 2-1 dnd Houston Colts defeated Chicago Cubs 5- Juan Marichal, 19-8, started for Giants, seeking his 20th vic- tory, but Drysdale put Dodgers ahead to stay when he bounced a single up the middie in the fifth to snap a 1-1 tie. The hit drove in Johnny Roseboro, who had singled and moved up on an infield out, Jim Gilliam drove in the other Dodger runs with a double and triple. Giants. scored in the first on singles by Chuck Hiller and Wil- lie Mays around an infield out. That was all they got. BOYER HOMERS Two-run singles by 'Curt Flood and Dick Groat featured Car- dinals' tie-breaking rally in the seventh before Ken Boyer wrapped it up with a three-run ninth inning homer, Boyer, who collected four runs batted in, had driven in the tying run in the sixth with a single following Groat's triple.. Don Demeter, Bobby Wine and Earl Averill homered for Phillies. Ray Sa- decki, 8-8, was the winner with Don Drysdale Gives Dodgers 7-Game Lead Ray Culp, 11-11, the loser. Braves' starter Denny Lemas- ter, 11-8, stroked two singles and drove in a run but needed Bob Shaw's relief help to sub- Cc due Mets. Shaw came on after|B Joe Christopher's single drove in the New York run in the sev- enth. Lemaster singled home a run in a two-run fifth against Tracy Stallard, 6-12, with the other run scoring on Frank Bol- ling's. sacrifice fly. Lee Maye doubled in 'the final run in the seventh. : Reds took advantage of a wild pitch by Don Schwall, 6-10, scored two runs in the first and held on to beat Pirates. A walk to Tommy Harper, Frank Rob- inson's single, a wild pitch that scored Harper and Gordy Cole- man's single got the job done. Joe Nuxhall, 12-6, Al Worthinz- ton and Bill Henry checked Pi- rates on six hits. Ken Johnson brought his rec- ord to 7-17 for Colts with his first victory since July 28, got the working room he needed as Houston struck for three runs in the first against Cal Koonce, 1-4, Pete Runnels' two - run homer and Bob Aspromonte's run-producing single. did the damage. Ron Santo's homer in the ninth broke up Johnson's shutout bid. it THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturday, August 31,1963 ]] ~ BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Amercian League ~- WL Pet, GBL New York Minnesota Los Angeles 61 75 Kansas City 58 74 .439 28 Washington 49 85 .366 38 Results Friday Detroit 4 Cleveland 5 Washington 7 Boston 0 New York 4 Baltimore 1 Los Angeles 6 Kansas City 2 Chicago 3 Minnesota 5 National League WL Pct. GBL 80 53 .602 -- 73 60 549 7 73 61 545 7% Los Angeles St. Louis Rochester Toronto Buffalo Richmond 473 503 BT: Altanta Indianapolis Little Rock 44 |Columbus Jacksonville Results Friday Indianapolis 5-4 Ai Richmond 4 Rochester 13 Buffalo 6 Little Rock 4 Toronto at Syracuse, cancell power failure " Columbus at Jacksonville ppd, rain Games Today Jacksonville-at Buffalo, N Richmond at Toronto, N Indianapolis at Little Rock, Columbus at Atlanta, N ~ Rochester at Syracuse, N San Francisco Milwaukee Philadelphia Cincinnati Chicago Pittsburgh Houston 373 03% New York 318 38 Results Friday Houston 5 Chicago 1 St. Louis 11 Philadelphia 6 Cincinnati 2 Pittsburgh 1 Milwaukee 3 New York 1 Los Angeles 3 San Francisco 1 International League Northern Division WL Pet. GBL 77 69 527 -- 526 10 'S11 12 508 121% % Syracuse 537 814 |F 533 9 SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Ges Dealer in your ares. 31 CELINA ST. 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